Publication | Closed Access
Remembering more than meets the eye: A study of memory confusions about incomplete visual information
12
Citations
29
References
2007
Year
Cognitive ScienceVisual CognitionMnemonicExplicit MemoryMemoryMemory ConfusionsCognitionVisual InformationSpontaneous ImagerySocial SciencesAttentionHuman MemoryExperimental PsychologyIncomplete Visual InformationPsychologyImplicit Memory
The purpose of this series of four experiments was to examine the possible role of spontaneous imagery in memory confusions about the way in which visual information had been experienced. After viewing pictures of familiar objects, complete or incomplete in visual form, participants were asked to remember the way in which the objects had been presented. Although, as predicted, memory for the objects themselves was quite good, participants falsely remembered seeing complete versions of pictures that were actually presented as incomplete. These false reports were observed across a variety of encoding and testing conditions. The results suggest that the false reports (referred to here as completion errors) are due to internal representations based on filling-in processes in response to the encoding of incomplete visual information. As such, the results also speak to alternative explanations for the completion errors and, more broadly, to theoretical perspectives that draw on filling-in processes when accounting for object identification and object memory.
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